In their various writings, including their book
The Art of Building a Home (1901), Parker and Unwin aimed to popularise the
Arts and Crafts Movement, and as a result of their success thousands of homes were built on their pattern in the early part of the 20th century. A notable example of one of their earliest collaborations at Clayton, Staffordshire, is dated to 1899, and was originally called the Goodfellow House after the man who commissioned it. Parker and Unwin were involved in designing many of the interior fittings, which remain in the house to this day, and the initial layout of the large gardens. Goodfellow sold the house in 1926 to Colley Shorter who ran the nearby pottery works of Wilkinson's and Newport. He renamed it Chetwynd House and when he married his star designer Clarice Cliff in 1940, she moved into the house and lived there until 1972. It is her association that has made the house particularly famous since. In 1902 Parker and Unwin were asked to design a model village at
New Earswick near
York for
Joseph and
Benjamin Seebohm Rowntree, and the following year they were given the opportunity to take part in the creation of
Letchworth (loosely based on the Utopian plan of Ebenezer Howard), when the First
Garden City Company asked them to submit a plan. In 1903 they were involved with the "Cottages Near a Town Exhibit" for the Northern Art Workers Guild of Manchester. In 1904 after their plan was adopted they opened a second office at
Baldock. In 1905
Henrietta Barnett asked them to plan the new garden suburb at
Hampstead, now known as
Hampstead Garden Suburb. Unwin moved from Letchworth to Hampstead in 1906, and he lived here for the rest of his life at the farmstead
Wyldes Farm. In 1907, Ealing Tenants Limited, a progressive cooperative in west London, appointed him to take forward the development of Brentham garden suburb. Unwin joined the
Local Government Board in December 1914. In 1915 he was seconded to the
Ministry of Munitions to design the villages of
Gretna and
Eastriggs and supervise others. From 1917 he had an influential role at the
Tudor Walters Committee on working-class housing whose report was published in 1918, the year in which he was appointed Chief Architect to the newly formed Ministry of Health. That post had evolved into the Chief Technical Officer for Housing and Town Planning by the time of his retirement in November 1928. His demonstration during the
Great War of the principles of building homes rapidly and economically whilst maintaining satisfactory standards for gardens, family privacy and internal spaces, gave him great influence over the Tudor Walters Committee and hence, indirectly, over much inter-war public housing. This report marked Unwin's definitive break from the traditional 'garden city' concept, as it proposed that the new developments should be peripheral 'satellites' rather than fully-fledged garden cities. Unwin became technical adviser to the Greater London Regional Planning Committee in 1929 and largely wrote its two reports, the first published in that year and the second in 1933. Unwin was President of the
Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI) from 1915 to 1916, President of the
Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) from 1931 to 1933, was knighted in 1932 and consulted by United States President
Franklin D. Roosevelt on the
New Deal in 1933. In 1936 he was appointed visiting Professor of Town Planning at
Columbia University and in 1937 he received the
RIBA Royal Gold Medal for architecture. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by
Norwegian Institute of Technology in 1935 and by
Harvard University in 1937. ==Footnotes==